Stuart Hall e a sociologia brasileira: reflexões sobre relações raciais e transformações metodológicas
Abstract
In this work, an investigation was carried out on the theoretical-methodological contributions of the author
British-Jamaican Stuart Hall for recent Brazilian Sociology regarding the theme
of race relations. Based on national theses and dissertations defended between the years
from 2010 to 2021, we start from the proposal that there is a methodological rupture between the tradition of
Brazilian racial thought of the 20th century and contemporary sociological production. As
central objective, we seek to investigate the influence of the post-colonial author on the production
sociological analysis of theses and dissertations defended in the last decade. We use the method of
documentary research together with the content analysis technique for systematization and analysis
of the collected material. We build on key concepts introduced by Hall, such as
identity, decentered subject and articulation, together with notions of difference and in
rhizome as a model of thought proposed by Deleuze and Guattari. We observe that when
using Hall's theoretical scheme, sociology works acquire a perspective
immanent of race categories. The study concludes that by welcoming Stuart's sociology
Hall, contemporary researchers acquire a potential decentering for
Brazilian Sociology: not only the idea of race, but also its method of incorporating a
an ethics immanent in sociological practice.
Collections
The following license files are associated with this item: